After 2 Olympic golds, Hanyu wants to master quad axel

National Sports

Feb 27, 2018

Japanese figure skater Yuzuru Hanyu shows off his gold medal he got in the Pyeongchang Olympics while speaking in Tokyo, Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2018, a day after returning home. After winning two Olympic gold medals, Hanyu has set his next realistic dream: Successful quadruple axel at competitions. Hanyu, who won gold in the Pyeongchang Games to become the first man to repeat as Olympic champion in 66 years,said Tuesday that he hoped to achieve the quadruple and half jump that nobody has successfully performed at a competition. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi)

By MARI YAMAGUCHI, Associated Press
TOKYO (AP) — After winning two Olympic gold medals, Yuzuru Hanyu wants to master a quadruple axel.
Hanyu, who at the Pyeongchang Games became the first man to repeat as Olympic champion in 66 years, told a news conference on Tuesday he hoped to be the first, or at least one of the first, figure skaters to accomplish the 4 1/2 revolutions in competition.“No one in competition has achieved successful quadruple axel jumps and there are very few people actually practicing even during training,” Hanyu said. “I want to continue my challenge towards achieving my dream of successfully performing the quad axel, even if I may not be the first person to do so.”
The usually articulate Hanyu struggled with questions at the Foreign Correspondent’s Club of Japan, where he was asked to describe how difficult the jump is and to show something of it.
He dropped his head to the podium, and then said a quadruple axel is like jumping rope four times while revolving twice with one’s eyes closed.
Even though top skaters have achieved success in five of the six quadruple jump varieties, only a few are practicing the more difficult quadruple axel, he said.
Scientists say humans can go as far as quintuple, Hanyu said, and his childhood coach is encouraging him to try.
Hanyu says he is interested.
But he says those difficult jumps add to the artistry of a performance only when performed with excellent basic technique.
Hanyu, who was off ice until January while recovering from a right ankle injury, said his gold medal in Pyeongchang was not easily won. His pain in the ankle was still only “20 to 30 percent” down from the worst.“I bet my life for this gold medal,” the 23-year-old Hanyu, who returned home on Monday, told the packed news conference. “I am alive and here, I am not dying,” he joked.
Hanyu said he was proud to have repeated as champion in a sport traditionally dominated by Europeans.“I believe it was a historic step forward that I was able to win the gold medal using Japanese music for my program,” he said.
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